Secretary Salazar Announces Boating Grants to 28 States to Help
Keep Waterways Clean
June 9, 2009
Contact: Joshua Winchell
703 358 2279
Joshua_winchell@fws.gov
Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar today announced that $14.6
million will be awarded to 28 states under the Clean Vessel Act grant program
in 2009. The grants will be used to fund the construction and installation of
sewage pumpout facilities and floating restrooms, to purchase pumpout boats and
provide educational programs for recreational boaters.
?Clean Vessel Act funds support construction of facilities in communities that
depend on recreational boating for their economy, and depend on clean water for
their health,? said Salazar. ?These grants provide immediate funding for
construction of infrastructure that will provide lasting value for recreational
boaters, and everyone who relies on clean waters.?
Since the program?s inception in the early 1990s, the program ? administered by
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ? has awarded more than $163 million to
states to install thousands of sewage pumpout stations. In addition, many
states now rely upon mobile sewage pumpout boats to make the sewage collection
process more efficient and convenient. A number of states also have begun
installing floating restrooms and pumpout stations in high use areas of lakes
and coastal waters.
Funding for the CVA program comes from the Sport Fishing and Boating Trust
Fund, formerly known as the Aquatic Resources Trust Fund, which is supported by
excise taxes levied on certain fishing and boating equipment and boat fuels.
"These Clean Vessel Act grants will help the states maintain clean and
healthy waters for people and wildlife," said U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service Acting Director Rowan Gould. "Sewage pumpouts may not be the most
glamorous conservation tool, but their presence can have an immediate and clear
impact on the well-being of aquatic resources and recreational waterways that
provide drinking water to millions of Americans."
A listing of grant awards made today include:
Florida: $1,816,575 ? The Florida Department of Environmental Protection
plans to install more than 29 dual purpose sewage pumpout-dump station
facilities for inland and coastal waters. The agency will continue its
education and outreach efforts with boaters to stress the importance of proper
sewage disposal.